The latest flashpoint in Bollywood is Neeraj Pandey’s ‘Ghuskhor Pandit’, starring Manoj Bajpayee as a bribe-loving cop from the Pandit community. Brahmin groups are up in arms, accusing the title of maligning their caste through a negative portrayal, fueling widespread demonstrations.
This echoes a pattern of contentious titles forcing industry heavyweights to pivot. Religious, caste, and political sensitivities have repeatedly sent films to the editing table.
Reliving the uproar: Samir Wived’s romantic drama with Kartik Aaryan and Kiara Advani ditched ‘Satyanarayan Ki Katha’ for ‘Satyaprem Ki Katha’ in 2023, dodging claims of divine mockery in its tale of pure love.
Raghav Lawrence’s 2020 Akshay Kumar starrer transformed from ‘Laxmi Bomb’ to ‘Laxmii’ following fierce backlash from the word ‘bomb’ paired with the prosperity goddess, plus love jihad allegations in the transgender ghost possession plot.
Indra Kumar’s ‘Thank God’ (2022), featuring Ajay Devgn as Chitragupta opposite Sidharth Malhotra and Rakul Preet Singh, rebranded the god-like figure as ‘CG’ to quell protests over ridiculing Hindu mythology in its karmic game narrative.
Ayush Sharma’s debut ‘Loveyatri’ (2018), backed by Salman Khan, softened ‘Loveratri’ amid Navratri purists’ objections, celebrating a young couple’s romance during the festival.
Bhansali’s ‘Padmaavat’ (2018) added a vowel and cut scenes after Karni Sena’s rampage against the original ‘Padmavati’, protesting the epic’s depiction of Rani Padmavati and Khilji’s invasion.
His 2013 hit ‘Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela’ prefixed guns to ‘Ramleela’, neutralizing complaints of sacrilege in the feuding families’ forbidden love story inspired by Shakespeare.
As ‘Ghuskhor Pandit’ battles similar headwinds, it reminds producers that bold titles risk cultural collisions, often resolved through compromises that preserve box-office dreams.